How AI Is Disrupting Medicine

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It's like ChatGPT is trying to mock me. Won't work...
 

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The medical journal Nature Medicine published an editorial on the uses of A.I. in medicine. Spoiler warning: They're not on board the hype train.

Show us the evidence for the value of medical AI
The adoption of artificial intelligence (AI)-powered tools is accelerating rapidly across all layers of healthcare systems. Predictive models, decision support tools and generative tools have entered clinical environments1, and large language models are increasingly being used by the general public to seek medical information and advice2. Yet evidence that AI tools create value for patients, providers or health systems remains scarce.
Obviously they're jealous of A.I.'s success. :hellokitty:
 
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Surprise. Surprise.

An emerging artificial intelligence tool used by family doctors to take notes during an examination is at risk of providing physicians with inaccurate information and hallucinations, Ontario’s auditor general has found, raising questions about the ongoing use of the software in the health-care system.

In 2023, Ontario Health began introducing AI Scribe programs to the broader health-care sector, allowing physicians, family doctors, nurse practitioners and therapists to adopt the technology.
Once a patient has authorized its use, AI Scribe listens to medical examinations and compiles a “SOAP” note that intertwines subjective and objective information provided by the patient and physician. The resulting information is compiled into four areas — subjective, objective, assessment and treatment plan — making up the acronym SOAP.

While the tool was intended to relieve the note-taking pressures health-care workers constantly faced, the auditor general found the systems could be inaccurate and unreliable.